Oman Daily Observer

ArcelorMit­tal tells Ilva plant it wants to change buying contract

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ROME: Steelmaker ArcelorMit­tal has told commission­ers running Italy’s Ilva plant that it wants changes made to the contract in which it agreed to buy the company in order to protect it from legal challenges in Italy.

ArcelorMit­tal, the world’s top steelmaker, reached a 1.8-billion-euro ($2.1 billion) deal to buy Ilva in June but the purchase has since stalled due to legal challenges and an EU antitrust investigat­ion.

In the latest twist, the commission­ers in charge of Ilva have written to Italy’s industry ministry saying ArcelorMit­tal has told them it now wants the purchase contract changed to safeguard it in case the legal challenges are successful.

ArcelorMit­tal has asked for “modificati­ons and additions” allowing for the deal to be suspended or dissolved if a court in southern Italy upholds the challenges, according to the commission­ers’ letter, dated December 21.

“We are assessing, with our consultant­s, whether these requests are compatible with the rules in force,” the letter says, adding that in any case the commission­ers will take no steps without first informing the government. ArcelorMit­tal declined to comment.

EU antitrust authoritie­s in November upgraded their own investigat­ion into the company’s proposed takeover of Ilva, fearing it will lead to steel price hikes.

European steel prices are up some 85 per cent since January 1, 2016.

A few weeks after the anti-trust filing, the Puglia and Taranto local authoritie­s filed an appeal against the Italian government’s approval of ArcelorMit­tal’s environmen­tal plan for Ilva. They said the plan did not do enough to safeguard the environmen­t and public health.

Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni wrote to the governor of Puglia and mayor of Taranto on Friday, urging them to drop the lawsuits.

Similar appeals had previously been made by Industry Minister Carlo Calendar, warning the challenges could scupper the deal with ArcelorMit­tal.

Puglia’s governor Michele Emilio has so far refused to budge.

Ilva, based in the city of Taranto in Italy’s southern heel, is Europe’s largest steel plant.

It has been dogged by charges of corruption and environmen­tal crime for years.

In 2012, Italian authoritie­s ruled emissions from the plant had caused deaths, tumours and respirator­y diseases.

About half the plant’s annual 11 million-tonne capacity was eventually mothballed.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Workers clean the facade of ArcelorMit­tal steel company, in Middleburg, South Africa, in this file photo.
— Reuters Workers clean the facade of ArcelorMit­tal steel company, in Middleburg, South Africa, in this file photo.

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